Friday 30 December 2011

RBS Volunteer Day 9th November 2011

The biggest stag loggery known to man

RBS/BTCV Command Centre

Building Dead Hedges and Clearing Bramble (a big and thankless task, so thank you)

Simon from the BTCV (British Trust Conservation Volunteers) came to me in the summer and asked if we could use some help in the form of Bankers in the Wilderness. Never one to look a gift horse in the mouth I spoke to the Head and we said yes! There was so much to do but really a concerted effort was needed and the volunteer day came at just the right time.

Our community RBS volunteers came from as far as Leeds and drove down for the day for the team building exercise in our Wilderness.
They did a grand job and cleared, created and worked as teams. Sometimes a little too hard but the Wilderness needed a good clearout and that is what it got.
The dead hedges are crafted and not just throw together and the stag loggery is like nothing I have ever seen before. The scale is immense!

Well done you volunteers and I hope you enjoyed your day with us and please do come back again.

www.redscapedesign.co.uk

New TreeBogs

Tree bogs - Construction Phase


Tree Bogs - Completed

Tree Bogs - Shiplap Detail

Hello All
It had been a busy time for the Wilderness but a quiet time for the Blog.. I forgot to keep abreast with the updates.

We have toilets!! They are beautiful!! I know it is sad and a little bit weird to make such a fuss over toilets but they are Douglas Fir beauties. And once they have their coat of osier willow around them they will be camouflaged from all and create a source of willow withies for classes/for the school/for anyone who is interested.

I did have a moment of doubt once I looked at the toilets and decided with Kenn that we would have to insert a smaller loo seat for the children as it would be safer.... my imagination ran wild and I couldn't sleep. This seat will be installed soon.

Now that the toilets are in we can open up the Wilderness to so many more parts of the community and also host new events here. This was a huge and important part of the redevelopment of the use of the Wilderness and I am very excited about the future.

Here are the finished loos. And the kids love them!!

www.redscapedesign.co.uk



Friday 6 May 2011

BTCV Woodland Management Course

Dead Hedges
BTCV Woodland Management Course Colleagues
Hello all
A lot has happened since my last blog. We have finished planting the wilderness for now.
The school has been spending more time in the wilderness with the children, and some children and parents were even invited to a Wilderness Adventure! All in all it seems like everyone had fun. I unfortunately missed it as I was at work!
BUT now, to work again on the Wilderness.
I need to write a management plan for the wilderness so that if I wasn't around that there would be a plan of works for the Wilderness that anyone could follow, and to do this I needed a little bit of help.
Which the school and BTCV provided in the form of a Woodland Management Course. What a brilliant two days!
So I now have a document which details how much intervention we will want in the Wilderness and all the projects that we would like to complete.

And I think I can now ID a leaf from a Hornbeam against a Beech and a Elm against a Hazel; Serrated, soft and smooth, rough like a cats tongue and fatter and shaggier.

And an Ash from an Elder and a Rowan; 9 leaflets, 5 leaflets 15 leaflets.

And a pedunculate oak; leaves are not on stalks, as opposed to a sessile oak, leaves are on stalks. Pheweee!

Clif and Jim running the course were fountains of knowledge and expertise and the others on the course including Petra who helped me with my ID's, BTCV Rob with his many jobs and stories, Isle of Man Greya and STAGS Jenny, Latin Tom, multi lingual Phil and everyone else( Gary, Justin, Tom 2, John and Neil), helped me to write the document but also made it really enjoyable and a valuable experience.
Hope you are all able to come down to the Wilderness (and volunteer) and see our teeny patch and enjoy it as much as we do.

www.redscapedesign.co.uk

Thursday 17 March 2011

Ferns and Grasses!

Well we have a limited budget and I wanted to get some amazing plants ... how to do this? Well ask the right people and they come in and do you favours for a good cause.


The world famous authority on grasses Neil Lucas at Knoll Gardens in Dorset is sending us his best grasses and Eupatoriums for the Wilderness. I can't wait to see them on site and for the lovely pink umbels to light up and anchor the pond with their soft pink hue. The grasses are going to add texture and height and a haze through which the pond will glisten.

And I had no end of trouble trying to source some Polystichum aculeatums (evergreen native hardy shield fern) as they were all sold out and my tight budget was now non-existant after being fairly invoiced by Knoll. But Mark Straver at Crocus did us a magnificent deal and I have been able to almost buy everything on my list for the wilderness. The ferns were picked up by me and are now having a little holiday in my back garden. WooHOO!!!!

See you next Wednesday!

www.redscapedesign.co.uk

Pond Planting and Volunteers!

Jake setting his teeny newts free!
Children from Rainforest Class
Bats Class throwing oxygenators into the pond



Hello to all my 5 regular readers!
So the pond has been planted up with the below:

Key:


Butomus umbellatus x 20

Caltha palustris x 20

Iris pseudoacorus x 30


Myriophyllum spicatum x 25

Potomogeton crispa x 25

Veronica beccabunga x 20

Myosotis scirpiodes x 20

Aponogeton distachyos x 6


Callitriche palustris x 25

Ceratophyllum demersum x 25


These took some getting. We had a few false starts trying to get these as there were some miscommunications to do with invoicing for them.
Anyway eventually they were all paid for and delivered ready for our next big volunteer day on the 3rd of March. However the volunteers did not come! Oh NO I hear you say!!

I think it was too close to half term and people had just forgotten. But the plants were there and the water was cold so I called in my lovely husband to come and help me (and get in the water whilst I directed from the dry and warmer side)
The children came in to help us by throwing in/delicately planting the oxygenators into the pond (as you can see above).

Jake came into school with a tub of baby smooth newts that had been found and needed rehousing and he let them swim off into the Wilderness pond. He was brilliant at this and let them jump off his hands into the water.

It was a very successful day and much was achieved. Please put the next planting day, Wednesday March 23rd, in your diary!

www.redscapedesign.co.uk